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Malaysia's top court declares several Islamic laws in Kelantan state unconstitutionalMalaysia has a dual-track legal system with Islamic criminal and family laws applicable to Muslims, running alongside civil laws. Islamic laws are enacted by state legislatures while civil laws are passed by Malaysia's parliament.
Reuters
Last Updated IST
<div class="paragraphs"><p>Muslim women hold placards as they stand in protest outside the Palace of Justice on the day the country's federal court delivers verdict in a constitutional case challenging the legality of some Islamic laws in Kelantan state, in Putrajaya, Malaysia.</p></div>

Muslim women hold placards as they stand in protest outside the Palace of Justice on the day the country's federal court delivers verdict in a constitutional case challenging the legality of some Islamic laws in Kelantan state, in Putrajaya, Malaysia.

Credit: Reuters Photo

Malaysia's top court on Friday declared more than a dozen Islamic laws enacted by the northeastern state of Kelantan as unconstitutional, in a decision that could affect the legality of sharia in other parts of the Muslim-majority country.

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Malaysia has a dual-track legal system with Islamic criminal and family laws applicable to Muslims, running alongside civil laws. Islamic laws are enacted by state legislatures while civil laws are passed by Malaysia's parliament.

The Federal Court, in an 8-1 decision of the nine-member bench, on Friday declared 16 laws in Kelantan's sharia criminal code "void and invalid", including provisions criminalising sodomy, sexual harassment, desecrating places of worship and sexual intercourse with a corpse.

Chief Justice Tengku Maimun Tuan Mat who delivered the majority judgement said the state had no power to enact the laws, as the subject of the legal provisions were covered under parliament's law-making powers.

"We therefore allow the petition's application for a declaration that (these laws) are void and invalid," she said.

Opposition leader and former Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin, whose coalition includes the hardline Islamist party PAS, in a statement on Thursday said the case could have a negative impact on the country's sharia legal system, and called on the government to amend the constitution to strengthen the Islamic laws and judiciary.

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(Published 09 February 2024, 08:36 IST)